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Russia got 7,500-pound rockets from North Korea And promptly blew up a pair Of Ukrainian supply bases

08 January 2024 02:05

Russia is lobbing North Korean-made ballistic missiles at Ukraine from positions just north of the Russia-Ukraine border, Forbes reports. Caliber.Az republishes the article.

The missile attacks, apparently involving KN-23 solid-fuel rockets, may have caused significant damage. At least one open-source analyst believes Russia’s new North Korean missiles struck a pair of Ukrainian army logistics bases in recent days, destroying as many as 10 valuable tanker trucks.

Russia’s acquisition of KN-23s—7,500-pound, solid-fuel rockets with 1,100-pound warheads—represents a major escalation of Russia’s 23-month wider war on Ukraine. And Ukraine might not be able to strike back with similar weapons.

International sanctions bar North Korea from exporting its homegrown rockets. But the regimes of Russian dictator Vladimir Putin and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un clearly are confident they can flout sanctions and widen the war without risking a serious response from Ukraine and its allies.

US national-security spokesperson John Kirby told reporters Pyongyang provided Moscow’s forces with rockets and launchers. The inertially-guided KN-23 usually launches from a wheeled transport-erector-launcher. It ranges 400 miles or so and should strike within 35 yards of its aimpoint.

It’s not some super-weapon. The KN-23 broadly is similar to Russia’s Iskander ballistic missile. Ukraine’s best American-made air-defenses—Patriot PAC-2s—routinely shoot down Iskanders.

But Ukraine has just three Patriot batteries, presumably one each in Kyiv, Odesa and Kharkiv. That leaves other cities defenseless against ballistic missiles. It’s not for no reason that, according to Kirby, Russia aimed its initial KN-23 attacks at Zaporizhzhia in southern Ukraine—a city without Patriot cover.

In supplying KN-23s, North Korea grows Russia’s missile arsenal and helps it to sustain the record-large barrages it has been launching since last month. Moscow’s aim obviously is to launch more missiles than Ukraine, with its limited supply of air-defense batteries and missile-reloads, can intercept.

Caliber.Az
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